Thursday, December 21, 2006

Bush "Developing Illegal Bioterror Weapons" for Offensive Use

Anyone out there think that Bushco had sunk as low as they could go? That their thuggish behavior had finally slowed down and/or been stopped, no new lows they could descend to? Is that what you thought? Well Auh Contraire Mes Amis, you've once again "misunderestimated" these evil clowns. How about "First Strikes in chemical and Biological Agents", does that make you sit up? Dubya with first strike capabilities with chem & bio agents. Feel better now? Didn't think you would. When these guys go as low as they can they start digging.
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Bush "Developing Illegal Bioterror Weapons" for Offensive Use
-By Sherwood Rosst, tr u t h o u t

In violation of the US Code and international law, the Bush administration is spending more money (in inflation-adjusted dollars) to develop illegal, offensive germ warfare than the $2 billion spent in World War II on the Manhattan Project to make the atomic bomb.

So says Francis Boyle, the professor of international law who drafted the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 enacted by Congress. He states the Pentagon "is now gearing up to fight and 'win' biological warfare" pursuant to two Bush national strategy directives adopted "without public knowledge and review" in 2002.


















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The Pentagon's Chemical and Biological Defense Program was revised in 2003 to implement those directives, endorsing "first-use" strike of chemical and biological weapons (CBW) in war, says Boyle, who teaches at the University of Illinois, Champaign.

Terming the action "the proverbial smoking gun," Boyle said the mission of the controversial CBW program "has been altered to permit development of offensive capability in chemical and biological weapons!" [Original italics.]

The same directives, Boyle charges in his book Biowarfare and Terrorism (Clarity Press), "unconstitutionally usurp and nullify the right and the power of the United States Congress to declare war, in gross and blatant violation of Article 1, Section 8, Clause 11 of the United States Constitution."

For fiscal years 2001-2004, the federal government funded $14.5 billion "for ostensibly 'civilian' biowarfare-related work alone," a "truly staggering" sum, Boyle wrote.
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